$12.80

Prelude to Bruise

Poetry by Saeed Jones

September 9, 2014 • 5.5 x 8.25 • 124 Pages • 978-1-56689-374-9

How do we reckon our past without being ravaged by it? How do we use people, and their bodies, to express ourselves?

About the Author

Saeed Jones’s debut poetry collection Prelude to Bruise was the winner of the 2015 Stonewall Book Award/Barbara Gittings Literature Award and a finalist for the 2015 National Book Critics Circle Award. His work has appeared in publications like Guernica, The Rumpus, Hayden’s Ferry Review, and Blackbird among others. Saeed is the recipient of fellowships from Cave Canem and Queer / Art / Mentors.

Thanks to a 2013 ADA Access Improvement Grant administered by VSA Minnesota for the Metropolitan Regional Arts Council, this title is also formatted for screen readers which make text accessible to the blind and visually impaired. To purchase this title for use with a screen reader please call (612) 338-0125 or email us at info@coffeehousepress.org.

Reviews

NPR’s Best Books of 2014Time Out New York Best Books of 2014Book Riot, 2014’s Must-Read Books from Indie PressesSplit This Rock Recommended Poetry Books of 2014Vol. 1 Brooklyn, A Year of Favorites, Jason DiamondGreenlight Bookstore, Holiday Picks

“In his debut collection, Jones has crafted a fever dream, something akin to magic. . . . Solid from start to finish, possessing amazing energy and focus, a bold new voice in poetry has announced itself.” —Publishers Weekly, starred review

“The features that distinguish his poems from prose—brevity, symbolism, implication—let him investigate the almost unsayable.” —Los Angeles Times

“This is indeed a book seamed in smoke; it is a dance that invites you to admire the supple twist of its narrative spine; it is hard and glaring and brilliant as the anthracite that opens the collection: ‘a voice mistook for stone, / jagged black fist.’” —NPR

“Jones had a meteoric rise to literary prominence in the past year. . . . The poems of this book are harrowing and heartbreaking, treating family, sexuality, and race with unrelenting intensity.” —Publishers Weekly

“The way these poems address violence, life in the south, race, sexuality and relationships makes for an engrossing read best consumed in as few sittings as possible.” —Time

“A debut poetry collection examining identity in all its forms—racial, sexual, geographical, and more—with both incisive intensity and tenderness.” —Off the Shelf

“Saeed’s Prelude to Bruise is a rigorous collection that challenges political, sexual and familial norms and bristles with pain. . . . No matter the subject, Jones’s writing is silky smooth.” —Washington Post

“This is as purely transformative as poetry gets. Saeed leads us through discovery of self: racial and gendered, political and familial.” —PrideSource

“Jones’ 2014 poetry collection, offers a candid, refreshing view of the issues often faced within the LGBT community, including struggles with identity and masculinity.” —America Magazine

“Jones’s lavish sonic patterning and gothic imagery often recall the incendiary mythos and immaculate craft of Sylvia Plath’s Ariel as well as the haunted, sensual longing of Thomas James’s Letters to a Stranger.”—Kenyon Review

“Jones’ poetry is evocative and rhythmic, at times tilting into a songlike cadence, and moves uneasily and strikingly between imagery of sex and violence.” —Portland Mercury

“Prelude to Bruise is a harrowing examination of masculinity and femininity as a ‘brutal’ performance.” —BuzzFeed

“Reading this book will change you.” —Cambridge Writers’ Workshop

“Saeed Jones’s first full-length book, Prelude to Bruise, is a necessary piece of contemporary poetry that bravely tackles issues such as abuse, promiscuity, homosexuality, and racism.” —Prairie Schooner

“Jones’ haunting lyricism creates a portrait of hard-won self-realization, of a young man's determined struggle, pushing through doubt and distress with the strength of his imagination and verve.” —NBCC’s Critical Mass

“Perhaps the readiest, most painfully assured debut of the decade.” —Flavorwire

“This book leaves your body transformed in a way that poetry should.” —ElevenEleven

“Prelude to Bruise by Saeed Jones, a tome of searing poetry about what it means to be Black, gay, Southern and so much more.” —Refinery 29

“A work of insight and great beauty, Jones’ first poetry collection manages to be both ferocious and and subtle.” —Brooklyn Magazine

“The poems in Prelude to Bruise enflame, with all flame’s consequences of wounding and illumination. . . . It’s a story of the forces of destruction—the destruction of black bodies and black selves—built into America, and it surfaces in lines of lust, violence, possession, and power.” —Rain Taxi

“Prelude to Bruise Saeed Jones is a powerful collection . . . with a high level of craft, emotion and metaphor.” —Ebony

“This would be an interesting collection to me even if I didn’t understand English. There are moments of such lushness.” —Dive Deeper

“Prelude to Bruise is an airtight collection of visceral and stunning poems.” —Mosaic Magazine

“‘I didn't exactly mean to survive myself,’ writes the African-American poet Saeed Jones, and the line comes to my mind: what it means to have survived official policies designed to erase you, and the kind of impulse to self-destruction that might arise in the face of this.” —The Monthly (Australia)

“Prelude to Bruise was published by Coffee House in August to widespread (and deserved!) acclaim.” —Electric Literature

“Jones uncovers what exactly is at stake when one presents oneself authentically, when one insists on being oneself regardless of the consequences.” —Coldfront

“A radical standard of pain acknowledges the intersection between individual and collective histories of suffering. This radical standard is the thrust of works like. . . . Saeed Jones’ Prelude to Bruise, a collection of poems that narrates the wounds of a black gay boy in the American South.” —Pacific Standard

“His work is imaginative and lyrical while maintaining a self-proclaimed ferocity, as if there could really be any other kind, that challenges conventions of masculinity and race in a deeply emotional way.” —Dazed

“Maybe the best collection you will read this year, Jones is a poet who also understands how to tell a story, obviously keeping his feet planted in the former since poetry is his craft, but giving the reader so much more to unpack page after page. At times harrowing, Jones succeeds at never straying too far away from beauty and light, and that balance makes this a true reading experience.” —Vol. 1 Brooklyn

“Saeed Jones brought the audience to a near swoon.” —Twin Cities Daily Planet

“Prelude to Bruise is a book with a controlled realm of imagery, which creates this really beautiful territory for the reader to explore.” —Ace Hotel

“Saeed Jones may be one of the most necessary poets of our time.” —July Westhale, Lambda Literary

“Beautiful, haunting and heartbreaking—Jones’s poems are an emotional punch to the gut. A lyrical shock to the system.” —Lambda Literary

“What these poems show us is the necessity of owning that longing, the refusal to let the wounds the world has laid upon us turn inward, into our shame, our silence. To show the world the face that the world has made.” —Muzzle Magazine

“‘[Saeed Jones] is leading the way and writing critically about the community,’ [Spectrum’s president] Diaz said.” —The Torch

“Prelude to Bruise is an airtight collection of visceral and stunning poems.” —Mosaic Magazine

“I packs a wallop . . . I found myself in awe.” —Raging Biblio-holism

“I was bowled over by Saeed Jones’s Prelude to Bruise (Coffee House Press, #16), a beautiful and biting collection of poetry that has been making waves in the US. Investigating race, sexuality and what it means to be southern, Jones’s lean, searing lines transcend identity politics.” —New Statesmen (UK)

“Poetry book most likely to win over your poetry-avoiding friends: Prelude to Bruise by Saeed Jones.” —Time Out New York

“Jones is responsible for a growing portion of the gay narrative being written online, and the Internet is a much better place for it. His voice will have even more impact with his upcoming debut, which will explore the collision of race, sexuality and identity.” —The Root, “30 Viral Voices Under 30”

“For years now the BuzzfeedLGBT editor has been lighting it up at his day job, and also on Twitter, with a ferocity befitting his name. Now, after earning praise from D.A. Powell and after winning a NYC-based Literary Death Match bout, Jones will use his debut collection to prominently display his poetry chops.” —The Millions

“This powerful collection feels at times like a blow to the throat, but when we recover, the air is sweeter for having been absent.” —Guernica

“It’s a book about identity that expands beyond the borders of the terms we use to cordon off safe spaces.” —Dialogist

“A stunning debut collection of one of America’s most promising young poets. . . . These poems lacerate as they heal, making us feel the resilient intensity of a protagonist who says, ‘I didn’t exactly mean to survive myself.’” —The Journal

“Saeed Jones has created a radically different coming of age narrative distinctly his own through forceful, original poetry.” —Lonesome Reader

“A daring, ferocious, and often impossibly gorgeous meditation on boyhood and personhood, language and love.” —Flavorwire

“The first book of Saeed Jones’s poetry, Prelude to Bruise, reads with astonishing momentum and tenacity, a lyrical torch thrust into shadows and silence to illuminate pain from a history of wounds.” —Shelf Awareness

“Jones has a voice, and it is not plucky or regretful. It is not about being a ‘man’—it’s more ambitious. This book is his credo, his aspiration. Convert or abstain, his ‘hunger [does] not apologize.’” —Poets at Work

“For their journey on this beautifully clear but sweltering Saturday afternoon, they were not disappointed, treated to over a dozen readings of vintage O’Hara poems, as well as new poems written by the likes of Saeed Jones, author of Prelude to Bruise and the editor of BuzzfeedLGBT.” —HuffPost

“Saeed Jones begins this electrifying book—one of the most exciting debut collections I’ve read in years—with a quotation from Kafka’s notebooks: ‘The man in ecstasy and the man drowning—both throw up their arms.’ It’s a powerful opening for these searing poems.” —Towleroad

“In his first book of poetry, Jones blazes forth, his voice new, potent, lyrical, and deadly beautiful. Enveloping his words in the body, its politics, its genders and colors, the legacy of its trials and abuse, Jones sings truths from the perimeter, the disenfranchised, the ready to be heard.” —Bookshop Santa Cruz

“Today my writing ambition, my heart, and my mind are expanded by my peers who are writing the books I read with breathless anticipation and envy.” —BuzzFeed

“Riveting and heartening to read.” —The Dodge Blog

“This book is so good it will give you night sweats.” —Greenlight Bookstore

“The collection seems to begin again frequently, and end too soon.” —Lenny

“I had to stop trying to read Saeed Jones’s debut, Prelude to Bruise, on the subway to avoid yelping with joy, weeping, or getting all hot and bothered in public.” —Work in Progress

“Prelude to Bruise is a thunderous title for a first collection. It promises that a bruise will come later. It says that, even when we feel like we’re drowning, we can still be ecstatic.” —The Brooklyn Rail

“Heartrending, lyrical, and raw.” —BuzzFeed

“Ecstatic and haunting.” —Brooklyn Magazine

“This is the type of book that merits clichéd hyperbole: because it will actually ‘leave you floored,’ ‘feeling naked’ (together, that's almost a Natalie Imbruglia lyric!), and ‘gasping for breath.’” —Flavorwire

“Poems like ‘Post Apocalyptic Heartbreak,’ ‘History According to Boy,’ ‘Prelude to Bruise,’ and others will break your heart and force you to investigate and confront the unconscionable brutality of this nation.” —MELO

“A compelling collection.” —Runestone

“Saeed writes about blackness and gayness, fierce and thick and brave in every poem.” —Medium

“Damn near genius.” —Shade

“Saeed Jones is one of the English department's most distinguished graduates.”—WKU Herald